I am really glad I picked this book up in the book store, thinking what the heck, it looks interesting. I enjoy finding odd reads in a good used book sale, books I would otherwise not buy, this is one such book. An adventure for sure, and a mystery. Although the country of Balabad is fictional, it is somewhat based upon the Afghanistan and/or Pakistan areas. The details given make me feel as if I were right there with the characters, walking the streets, seeing the sites, smelling the smells and hearing the sounds. I could nearly see this story playing out like a movie in my mind. It was somewhat of a slow starter, but then it hooked me and I continued like devouring a delicious dessert. It has 3 points of view happening, one from the distant past, one of the present and one of the crooks, all collide together. It is all wrapped up in the end like a wonderful present, which is a nice rest from series books. I thoroughly enjoyed the story. This book is definitely geared for youth beginning with the 8-12 year old range, however, the slow start might deter their interest.
A once upon time atmosphere, kings, 7 princes, 7 keys, a guide, treachery, war, savagery, middle east, storing away for future hope, salt mines, trust and misplaced trust, carpet seller, green tea, journalism, archaeology, buzkashi (similar to polo on horseback only the ball being a dead goat), rich and poor, boredom, adventure, mystery, tall tales, stolen artifacts, home burglary, buried treasure, the importance of historical heritage, oral history, thieves, thieves market, courage and cowardice, passing knowledge from generation to generation, consequences of wrong decisions, friendship and family.
My favorite quote from this book... The young do not know their limitations, and so are capable of great and foolish things.